While elder sister Norma devoted herself to tear-stained romance and tragedy, Constance Tallmadge carved out her own reputation in a series of bubbly, Lubitsch flavored comedies. Often appearing as the "virtuous vamp," (a mesmerizing beauty who could be naughty yet nice), Constance had looks and comic timing that are as modern today as they were eighty years ago. In Her Night of Romance, an heiress traveling in England disguises herself to discourage fortune-hunters. She falls in love with a handsome nobleman (Ronald Colman) who is secretly impoverished. When they spend a night alone at his former state, they are forced to pretend that they are married, a situation that threatens to unravel their storybook romance just as it's getting started. Her Sister from Paris allowed Tallmadge to demonstrate her comic range in dual roles: A frumpy-but-faithful housewife and her sophisticated twin sister. When a hausfrau's husband (Colman) begins to lose interest in his wife, the arrival of her twin, a dancer and "woman of the world," provides just the right impetus to reinvigorate their relationship.
Director: Sidney A. Franklin
Director: Sidney Franklin
Actor: Constance Talmadge
Actor: Ronald Colman
Actor: Jean Hersholt
Actor: George K. Arthur
Actor: Margaret Mann
Actor: Albert Gran
Actor: Gertrude Claire
Actor: Robert Rendel
Actor: Sidney Bracey
Actor: Joseph Dowling
Actor: Templar Saxe
Actor: Eric Mayne
Actor: Emily Fitzroy
Actor: Claire de Lorez